Wildparkstadion
Capacity | 29 699 |
---|---|
13,402 (Covered places) | |
14,462 (Terracing) | |
24 (Skyboxes) | |
80 (Disabled seats) | |
Country | Germany |
City | Karlsruhe |
Clubs | Karlsruher Sport-Club |
Inauguration | 17/07/1955 |
Opening game | 07/08/1955 (FC Karlsruhe - Rot-Weiss Essen, 2-0) |
Renovations | 1957, 1968, 1978, 1986, 1993 |
Design | Thomas GroĂźmann, Lucy Hillebrand (1993) |
Address | Adenauerring 17, 76131 Karlsruhe |
Description: Wildparkstadion
Decision to build a new stadium in the vast downtown park was made in 1952, when two local clubs merged to create Karlsruher SC. A new landfill giant covered 7.5 hectares of what used to be a multi-discipline sports complex. With all stands uncovered, the stadium could hold roughly 50,000 people.
Opening came in a great moment for KSC, who had just won their first domestic cup and took on Rot-Weiss Essen, reigning champions, in their first match in August 1955. That day some 45,000 spectators came, but it wasn’t the first mass event of the stadium.
Several days earlier an athletic festival was held and no wonder – Wildparkstadion was considered a very modern stadium and was also built in the common multi-use layout. However, as future showed, it saw its last major athletic event in 1968 and became football-specific in terms of use.
First floodlighting system came in 1957 and was replaced by final 54-meter masts in 1978. Modern giant screen came in 1986, just after the north-eastern side received its upper deck. Completely new main grandstand was the last upgrade in 1993, providing 24 skyboxes.
The improvements didn’t change the overall structure’s aging and in 2006 decision was made to build three new stands adjoining the one from 1993, this time with no athletic track. The pitch was relocated closer to the main stand, but further operations were halted as the city searched for an alternative new-stadium location. Eventually, in 2014 it was decided to build new structure at Wildparkstadion, but no works commenced so far.
Advertisement
Pictures
-

11.04.2009 © Sven Scharr (cc: by) 18.03.2005 © Martin DĂĽrrschnabel (copyright-free) 24.04.2010 © Mr.Clever (cc: by) 24.04.2010 © Mr.Clever (cc: by) 24.04.2010 © Mr.Clever (cc: by) 24.04.2010 © Mr.Clever (cc: by) 24.04.2010 © Mr.Clever (cc: by) 24.04.2010 © Mr.Clever (cc: by) 24.04.2010 © Mr.Clever (cc: by) 19.04.2014 © Groundhopping Merseburg 19.04.2014 © Groundhopping Merseburg 19.04.2014 © Groundhopping Merseburg 19.04.2014 © Groundhopping Merseburg 19.04.2014 © Groundhopping Merseburg 19.04.2014 © Groundhopping Merseburg 19.04.2014 © Groundhopping Merseburg 19.04.2014 © Groundhopping Merseburg 19.04.2014 © Groundhopping Merseburg 02.09.2009 © David Neukirch (cc: by-nc-sa) 10.05.2008 © Thomas Link (cc: by-sa)
Related news
2020
-
Germany: New grandstand in Karlsruhe delayed
Seats are being installed, as are standing area railings. But the massive east stand at Wildparkstadion won't be ready in time. This could derail all of the stadium reconstruction effort.
-
Germany: Construction in Karlsruhe in line with schedule
Pandemic or not, construction work on the new Wildparkstadion in Karlsruhe is progressing as expected. Its first new grandstand should be delivered in September. It's the further phases that may be challenged.
-
Germany: Potential cost increase in Karlsruhe
It only took a couple months of construction for financial issues to arise in Karlsruhe. General constractor is expecting a vast, €15-30 million increase in funding, according to Badische Neueste Nachrichten.
2018
-
New design: The future Wildparkstadion
The old ground is already siappearing, while we were informed of the general contractor signing his contract. On that occasion the very first renderings of new Wildparkstadion were released.
-
Germany: Legal pyroshow, yet penalty imminent?
Karlsruher SC supporters lit 180 flares. They had the green light of all safety authorities you might imagine, from their club. They didn't do it during the game or in the stand. And yet the club may face a €63,000 penalty. Absurd, right?
-
Germany: Farewell ceremonies over for Wildparkstadion
It's not disappearing all at once and yet it's been a very sentimental weekend in Karlsruhe. Yesterday the last game, today the souvenir-seat event and tomorrow – first phase of demolition.
-
Germany: Construction approved, farewell Wildparkstadion!
Yesterday the city council voted in favour of stadium reconstruction, today Karlsruher SC invited supporters for the final game of Wildparkstadion. Demolition is coming fast!
-
Germany: Karlsruhe stadium later and more expensive
Remnants of WWII are the reason why new stadium in Karlsruhe just became more problematic. Budget had to increase, time frame changed entirely and interim use became more difficult.
2017
2016
2015
-
10+ Ranking 2015: Attendances in Europe (Part 2. The Clubs)
Borussia, Barca and Man United – lovely dominant trio. But it wasn’t them who gained most fans last season. Check all 217 clubs that draw an average crowd of 10,000+!
-
10+ Ranking 2015: Attendances in Europe (Part 1. The Leagues)
Numbers don’t lie: French Ligue 1 outgrew Italian Serie A as Europe’s fourth largest league. Premier League seems unlikely to catch up to Bundesliga, while Turkey, Ukraine and Scotland are down.
-
Germany: These are the best Bundesliga fields
For the second consecutive year Allianz Arena was selected as one of the best fields in Germany. In the 2. Bundesliga Karlsruhe grabbed the lead. Find out who came second!
2014
-
Karlsruhe: Nothing to save, new stadium has to be built
In less than three weeks the Karlsruhe city council will decise whether to build a brand new stadium or renovate the current one. And all indications say the latter option is… not an option.
-
10+ Ranking: Here are the best European clubs by attendance
There are 229 clubs in Europe enjoying on average 10,000 spectators and more. We list all of them to show the Continent’s most magnetic teams. Some fanbases really deserve praise for their participation, right Rangers/Portsmouth?
-
Germany: Finally solid time frame for new Karlsruhe stadium
It's been nearly 9 years (!) since debate on the new stadium in Karlsruhe began. During that time barely anything has been established regarding the stadium itself. Only recently a location was selected, one where current Wildparkstadion stands.
2013
2012
-
Germany: Controversial safety regulations approved, what now?
Yesterday 36 top clubs voted on proposed safety regulation changes with vast majority in favour. Many fans see this as clamp-down on fan culture, but others are encouraged by events of past few weeks. What's changing inside German stadia?
-
Germany: Fans don’t feel safe?
Temperature around German football safety has been growing for months and is almost as hot as the flares set off by fans inside stadiums. Flares much hated by football governing bodies who suggested a new safety system, claiming people don’t feel safe at football games. They only forgot to ask the people, whether this is the case…